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It’s 1:22 a.m., and the last lighting, video and sound cases are getting loaded up and pushed off the stage at the Hollywood Bowl, where Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers played three incredible sold-out, hometown shows to close out the band’s 40th Anniversary tour.

Fifty-three shows. Twenty-four states. Twelve lighting crew. Eleven truck drivers. Nine in Production. Seven sound guys. Six backline crew. Six months. Five opening acts. Three countries. Three riggers. One legendary band and over one million legendary fans.

Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers kicked off the final leg of the 40th Anniversary tour at the third annual KAABOO music festival at the Del Mar Fairgrounds outside San Diego.

Headlining Sunday night, Tom and the band topped a star-studded three-day lineup that included performances from Red Hot Chili Peppers, Muse, Alannis Morrisette, The Wallflowers, Jane’s Addiciton, Weezer and Jackson Browne, to name just a few.

Fresh off a two-week break, Tom and the guys brought the energy early with a buzzing “Forgotten Man” that led nicely into “I Won’t

We are pleased to announce that the limited edition 40th Anniversary Tour raglan jersey from the Wrigley Field concert is now available in the Tom Petty Store! Visit the store and get yours today while supplies last!

Standing in the hallway outside of his dressing room backstage at the Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, CA on Friday night, Tom Petty smiled widely as his head bobbed to the beat of “Rebel Heart,” the first single off opening band The Shelters’ debut album released last year.

The young Los Angeles rock four-piece aren’t strangers to the Heartbreaker camp, having opened the shows on last year’s Mudcrutch tour, but the connection runs deeper than simply serving as an opening act.

On February 17-19, 1977, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers played three sold-out shows at The Keystone, the legendary rock club in downtown Berkeley played by the likes of Jerry Garcia, Ray Charles, The Talking Heads, The Ramones, Metallica and B.B King, among many more.

It was the start of the band’s first cross-country tour supporting their debut album, and the Keystone shows were the springboard, hurtling the band east to shows in the Midwest, East Coast and, ultimately, Europe.

Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers played the back-end of their summer baseball park doubleheader Saturday, packing more than 42,000 fans into Seattle’s Safeco Field for a two-hour-plus, career-spanning concert that culminated with a fireworks show above the stage following the final note of “American Girl.”